Nancy Pelosi: Dick Cheney 'Set A Tone' For CIA Torture

U.S.
House Minority Leader Pelosi speaks to the press after meeting
with U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House in
WashingtonThomson
Reuters

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democratic House Leader Nancy Pelosi said
on Sunday that former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney "set a
tone" for the interrogation and detention programs conducted by
the Central Intelligence Agency in the aftermath of the September
11, 2001 attacks.

Pelosi said she believed Cheney, an influential figure in U.S.
security policy under former President George W. Bush, was proud
of the CIA's actions during the Republican administration.

"I do believe that during the Bush-Cheney administration, that
Vice President Cheney set a tone and an attitude for the CIA,"
Pelosi said on CNN's "State of the Union" program.

"Many people in the CIA are so patriotic, they protect our
country in a way to avoid conflict and violence," she said,
adding the agency's "attitude" came from Cheney. "I think he's
proud of it."

Pelosi's comments came after the U.S. Senate Intelligence
Committee voted last week to declassify and release portions of a
report on an investigation into the CIA's detention and
interrogation practices after the September 11 attacks, which
critics say amounted to torture.

Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democratic chairwoman of the panel,
said the report exposes brutality and chronicles "a stain on our
history that must never be allowed to happen again".

Congressional and intelligence sources have said the report
strongly condemns now-abandoned techniques such as water
boarding, or simulated drowning, and concludes they did not
produce significant counter-terrorism breakthroughs.

It is expected to be weeks or more before any of the document is
cleared for release.

Republican House Intelligence Committee Chairman Mike Rogers,
responding to Pelosi, warned against politicizing the report
ahead of November's midterm elections and said it was not "the
Holy Grail".

"That politicizes this in a way that's horribly counterproductive
and likely to lead people to the wrong conclusions," he said on
CNN.

He said he had "real misgivings" about the investigation, which
some Republicans have criticized as partisan.

(Writing by John Whitesides; Editing by Jim Loney and Stephen
Powell)

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